Almost 500 people, including 85 civilians, were killed during in-fighting between rebel groups and an Al-Qaeda branch in Syria in the past week, an activist group reported.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights stated that
at least 482 people were dead since the fighting between
moderates and mainstream rebel factions versus Islamic State of
Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) intensified on January 3.

The group added that 157 individuals were from the ISIL, 240
others were from more moderate factions and 85 were civilians.

Initially the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) were
fighting on the side of the moderates to oust Syrian President
Bashar Assad in a conflict that began in March of 2011.

The fighting between the rebels had spread across northern Syria
over the past week. The most recent violence broke out on Friday
in the province of Aleppo, after the ISIL killed a local doctor.

Nusra Front, which also shares a radical ideology but is composed
mostly of local fighters, united with several other splinter
groups to carry out reprisal attacks against ISIL throughout the
country.

There had been previous resentment towards the group – staffed
predominantly with non-Syrian fighters – for the harsh regime it
has imposed on controlled areas in the country since entering the
war last year.

ISIL is also engaged in conflict in Iraq's Anbar Province, which
it plans to unite with Syria to form a caliphate. The military
group is known as the most radical jihadist wing of the Syrian
rebels. The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant’s roots go back
to the early years of the Iraq War. It was established in April
2004 by Sunni extremists, and then pledged allegiance to Osama
bin Laden.

At that time, ISIL was called Al-Qaeda in Iraq. Two years later
the group was rebranded as the Islamic State of Iraq. In 2013, it
gained a strong presence in northern Syria, adding ‘Levant’ to
its name.

On Friday the UN Security Council criticized the latest terrorist
attacks in Iraq and adopted its first statement of the new year,
expressing support for the Iraqi government in its fight against
terrorism.

“The Security Council deplores in the strongest terms the
recent events in the cities of Ramadi and Fallujah in Anbar
province in Iraq. The Security Council condemns the attacks that
are being perpetrated by Al-Qaeda affiliate, the Islamic State in
Iraq and the Levant,” the statement read.

“The Security Council urges the people of Iraq, including
Iraqi tribes, local leaders, and Iraqi security forces in Anbar
province, to continue, expand and strengthen their cooperation
against violence and terror.”

Syrian extremists recruit westerners

Back in Syria, the conflict has been growing and preoccupying
world leaders’ minds.

The FBI’s director revealed that tracking Americans who have
returned from Syria has become among the bureau’s highest
counter-terrorism priorities. According to senior
counter-terrorism officials, Islamic extremist groups in Syria
with ties to Al-Qaeda are trying to identify, recruit and train
Americans and other westerners who have travelled there, and
looking to have them carry out attacks once they have returned
home.

US officials say that at least 70 Americans have either travelled
to Syria or tried to since the civil war started three years ago.
That number was never disclosed until Thursday.

Syria’s civil war has become a magnet for westerners seeking to
fight with rebels against the government of President Bashar
Assad.

In the meantime, US President Barack Obama is deciding whether or
not to resume non-lethal military aid to Syria’s moderate
opposition. The US halted shipments last month after warehouses
filled with equipment were seized by the Islamic Front, a
coalition of rebel fighters that broke off from the US-backed
Free Syrian Army.

Experts warn about resuming the non-lethal aid. “US provided
lethal assistance through Jordan, CIA and through Turkey to the
opposition. But the opposition is fragmented, incapable and more
radical elements, principally, the foreign fighters have taken
over the opposition in terms of the fighting. And inevitable what
will happen if you start to pass weapons to the opposition, they
will fall into the hands of the extremists,” Security
analysts and former Pentagon official Michael Maloof told RT.